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November 25, 2016 – December 1, 2016

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Another Arab awakening looming. China clamp down on capital flight. Indonesia’s forests are burning.

Headlines

Special Reports / Opinion Pieces

Briefs

Graphics

FT – North Pole temperature rise increases climate fears – Pilita Clark 11/22

FT – British workers face worst decade for pay in 70 years – Gemma Tetlow 11/24

Economist – What the world worries about 11/24

FT – India’s demonetization in four charts – Kiran Stacey 11/27

WSJ – Daily Shot – 11/30

Featured

*Note: bold emphasis is mine, italic sections are from the articles.

De-development: Another Arab awakening is looming, warns a UN report. Economist. 29 Nov. 2016.

On November 29, the UN produced its latest Arab Development Report and the findings are not all that encouraging. “Five years on from the revolts that toppled four Arab leaders, regimes are ruthlessly tough on dissent, but much less attentive to its causes.”

“As states fail, youth identify more with their religion, sect or tribe than their country. In 2002, five Arab states were mired in conflict. Today 11 are. By 2020, predicts the report, almost three out of four Arabs could be ‘living in countries vulnerable to conflict.'”

“Horrifyingly, although home to only 5% of the world’s population, in 2014 the Arab world accounted for 45% of the world’s terrorism, 68% of its battle-related deaths, 47% of its internally displaced and 58% of its refugees. War not only kills and maims, but destroys vital infrastructure accelerating the disintegration.”

“The Arab youth population (aged 15-29) numbers 105m and is growing fast, but unemployment, poverty and marginalization are all growing fast. The youth unemployment rate, at 30%, stands at more than twice the world’s average of 14%.”

“Yet governance remains firmly in the domain of an often hereditary elite. ‘Young people are gripped by an inherent sense of discrimination and exclusion,’ says the report, highlighting a ‘weakening [of] their commitment to preserving government institutions.'”

Further, “despite the Arab League’s pretensions to brotherhood, visa-free travel among its 22 countries in unusual. Many Arabs need exit permits to boot.”

As the report’s lead author, Jad Chaaban, so aptly puts it “the moment I ban a displaced or marginalized person from traveling to work, I’m implicitly leaving him as a victim for an extremist ideology.”

On the plus side (or downside for the ruling elites), the current youth of the Arab world are better educated and more in tune with the world at-large thanks to social media.

China to clamp down on outbound M&A in war on capital flight. Gabriel Wildau, Don Weinland, and Tom Mitchell. Financial Times. 29 Nov. 2016.

“China is readying new restrictions on outbound foreign investment in an effort to curb capital outflows that are putting downward pressure on the renminbi and draining foreign exchange reserves, according to people who have seen a draft of the rules.”

“The State Council is most concerned about outbound mergers and acquisitions worth more than $10bn, said two people familiar with the government’s deliberations. They added that Chinese officials would scrutinize purchases of more than $1bn if they were outside the investor’s core business. Meanwhile, state-owned enterprises will not be allowed to invest more than $1bn on a single overseas real estate transaction.”

“‘The reversal of measures to liberalize capital outflows reflects China’s zig-zag approach to reforms,’ said Eswar Prasad, a China finance expert at Cornell University. ‘This step signals the government’s conventional preference for stability and control rather than economic liberalization and resulting volatility.'”

“According to commerce ministry data, Chinese companies’ overseas purchases have surged past last year’s record of $121bn for non-financial outbound investments, reaching $146bn over the first 10 months of 2016.”

“Due largely to capital outflows, the renminbi has fallen 5.8% this year, on track for its worst year on record. China has sold dollars from its foreign exchange reserves to try to curb downward pressure on the currency, with reserves hitting $3.12tn at the end of October, the lowest level since March 2011.”

“China is on course to record its first net foreign direct investment deficit this year, according to balance of payments data. Inbound FDI exceeded outbound flows every quarter from 1998 until the middle of last year but China has reported FDI deficits for four of the past five quarters, including a record $31bn in the third quarter of 2016.”

In addition to concerns about capital flight due to US dollar appreciation relative to the Yuan, “analysts and bankers said Beijing was also concerned about the quality of Chinese overseas investments. The government fears some transactions are being rushed through without proper due diligence to cash in on the dollar’s continuing appreciation against the renminbi.”

Despite tough talk, Indonesia’s government is struggling to stem deforestation. Economist. 26 Nov. 2016.

Despite being offered $1bn by Norway to stop cutting down its forests, Indonesia continues to burn its peatlands.

“In recent years no country has lost forest at a faster rate than Indonesia. Between 2000 and 2012 around 6m hectares [14.8m acres] of primary (meaning virgin) forest disappeared, mainly on the islands of Borneo and Sumatra. Roughly 40% of the deforestation took place in nominally protected areas.”

Further, the forest being cleared tends to be peatland. “Indonesia contains around 14.9m hectares of peatland – most of the world’s tropical peat forests.”

“Peat forests can be as much as 200 times more damaging to the atmosphere when burnt than other types of vegetation, both because they store more carbon and because more of it is released as methane, an especially harmful greenhouse gas.”

Bottom line, the palm-oil firms have too much influence and it has been too easy bribe officials to gain access to protected lands… “a paper published in 2013 found that almost 90% of deforestation in Sumatra between 2000 and 2010 was done by big palm-oil firms.”

Other Interesting Articles

Bloomberg Businessweek

The Economist

AWCS – Something I’m Worried About (underfunded pensions) 11/27

Bloomberg – Trump’s Tax Cut Means Billion-Dollar Writedowns for U.S. Banks 11/30

Economist – Barcelona hits Airbnb with a hefty fine 11/25

FT – Lawyers shake up a sleepy pension world 11/24

FT – Nigerian oil companies hit hardest by funding crisis 11/26

FT – China ‘fake equity’ court ruling threatens shadow banks 11/27

FT – Hunt for yield pushes more investors into riskier assets 11/28

FT – China M&A: full stop 11/29

FT – Beijing targets family assets in city anti-graft crackdown 11/29

FT – Chinese household debt surges 11/29

FT – China slaps extra tax on super-luxury cars 11/30

Inst. Investor – How Low Can CalPERS Go? 11/30

NYT – In Scotland, Trump Built a Wall. Then He Sent Residents the Bill. 11/25

NYT – Inside a Fake News Sausage Factory: ‘This Is All About Income’ 11/25

NYT – ‘My Soul Feels Taller’: A Whistle-Blower’s $20 Million Vindication 11/25

Vanity Fair – My descent into the right-wing media vortex 11/23

Visual Capitalist – Fertility Rates Keep Dropping, and it’s Going to Hit the Economy Hard 11/25

WSJ – Rising Mortgage Rates Help, but Also Hurt, Banks 11/27

WSJ – Big Names Take Hit on Theranos 11/28

WSJ – Home Prices Recover Ground Lost During Bust 11/29

WSJ – Chinese Developers Reassess U.S. Projects 11/29

WSJ – Why Italian Stability Is in the Hands of One Bank’s Bondholders 11/30

WSJ – India’s Cash Dash Stuffs Banks With Problems 12/1

 

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